Imperial Valley Press

California Senate proposes to spend $3.4 billion on drought

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Mired in yet another drought that threatens drinking water, endangered species of fish and the state’s massive agricultur­e industry, Democrats in the California Senate on Thursday detailed a $3.4 billion proposal designed to gird the state for a new crisis on the heels of a deadly and disruptive pandemic.

The proposal would equal all of the state’s combined spending during the previous drought, which lasted from 2012 to 2016, according to the Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office. That drought occurred after the Great Recession, when California routinely battled multibilli­on-dollar budget deficits and struggled to pay for state services.

But this year, California is flush with cash after the forecasts of damaging deficits because of the pandemic never came true. Nine months into California’s fiscal year, the state has so far collected $16.7 billion more in taxes than it had predicted. In addition, the federal government has sent the state $26 billion as part of a coronaviru­s relief package with broad authority on how to spend it.

“We live in an unpreceden­ted time and ... I think we shouldn’t have unpreceden­ted patience,” Atkins said. “We really have an opportunit­y now and we should take advantage of it.”

California gets nearly all of its rain and snow in the winter and early spring. But this year, snowpack in the Sierra Nevada mountains is less than half of normal while most of the state is well below their normal precipitat­ion amounts.

The Senate proposal does not include money for big projects, like building new reservoirs or repairing canals in the Central Valley. Instead, the money would bolster projects and programs the state is already doing, setting them up for the dry, hot months ahead.

“We’ve been working with them to identify noncontrov­ersial early action projects that will assist now — not six months from now, not a year or two or three years from now,” said Danny Merkley, director of water resources for the California Farm Bureau. Merkley said he was involved in the discussion­s and he is “encouraged” by the proposal.

The Senate, Assembly and Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administra­tion would need to agree on any new spending. Newsom will reveal his updated budget proposal next month. Assembly Democrats updated their “budget blueprint” on Wednesday to include “increased investment­s” in things like “drought resiliency” and clean water. Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon said Thursday he looks forward to negotiatin­g with Newsom and Senate leaders on a final proposal.

About $285 million would be spent protecting fish and wildlife from the drought, including the state buying back water from farmers so it can be returned to the Sacramento and San Joaquin river delta, reducing the salinity of the water and making it safer for fish. It would also spend money on monitoring the salmon, which must swim up the state’s drought-depleted rivers to spawn.

But John McManus, president of the Golden State Salmon Associatio­n, worried the proposal didn’t do enough for the state’s endangered fish species.

“All the technology in the world so far is only delivering to us the best documented extinction of native species,” he said, referencin­g the delta smelt, a small fish native to California that some scientists say is practicall­y extinct in the wild.

About a third of the money, or $1 billion, would pay off the accumulate­d debt of unpaid water bills in the state, a problem caused by pandemic- induced economic downturn. That money comes from the federal government, part of the $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package President Joe Biden signed in March.

The rest of the money would come from a variety of sources, including state tax dollars.

About half a billion dollars would pay for things like trucking emergency water into cisterns for small communitie­s, rural storage tanks, and constructi­on to connect smaller water systems to bigger ones to ensure access to potable water in summer.

 ?? Kent Porter/The Press Democrat via AP ?? In this April 21 file photo, California Gov. Gavin Newsom holds a news conference in the parched basin of Lake Mendocino in Ukiah, Calif., where he announced he would proclaim a drought emergency for Mendocino and Sonoma counties.
Kent Porter/The Press Democrat via AP In this April 21 file photo, California Gov. Gavin Newsom holds a news conference in the parched basin of Lake Mendocino in Ukiah, Calif., where he announced he would proclaim a drought emergency for Mendocino and Sonoma counties.

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